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November 23, 2009
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Home > Music > 2008 > April |  
MUSIC REVIEW
A Musical Lectio Divina
Ryan Lott's meditative, mystical, and mesmerizing debut.



At last spring's Festival of Faith and Music at Calvin College, I was asked to officiate in a contest called "Bandspotting." It was like American Idol in that we were asked to evaluate a lot of musical unknowns and provide the lucky winner with his or her big break (okay, at least some kind of break). It was unlike American Idol in that we didn't get to make any snarky comments.

The winner of the contest was a young man named Ryan Lott, who goes by the nom de plume Son Lux. Lott is a classically trained pianist who is enamored with Kid A–era Radiohead. He sings in a hushed rasp, throws in some Rachmaninoff Sturm und Drang, and then slices and dices everything via tape loops, lots of sampling (everything from fairly standard hip-hop beats to operatic divas), and electronic blips and beeps.

At War With Walls & Mazes, recently released on Anticon Records, is the long-awaited Son Lux debut. Lott's musical mashup—an extraordinary merger of classical, electronica, and hip-hop influences—is reason enough to care about this album. But I was also immediately struck by his use of Scripture (and lines clearly derived from Scripture) throughout these very non-standard songs. Lott starts with a biblical verse, a fragment of a verse, a spiritually charged word—and repeats it over and over, like praying with Rosary beads. And after listening to the same scrap of truth repeated, sliced and diced, taken out and examined from all sorts of musical angles, I finally got it. This is the musical equivalent of Lectio Divina, the spiritual discipline of meditating on a small segment of Scripture and soaking in that truth in all its ramifications. And it took a classically trained indie kid to make it work musically via Radiohead and Rachmaninoff.

The music is quiet, meditative, and occasionally, thunderously beautiful.

Put down all your weapons
Let me in through your open wounds,

Lott sings at the beginning of the album, and then circles back to the theme at the end. In between, surrender never sounded so multifaceted, and so bracing.

Andy Whitman, senior contributing editor for Paste magazine.



Related Elsewhere:

At War With Walls & Mazes is available from Amazon.com and other retailers.

Other music reviews are in our full-coverage section.




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[Reader Reviews]
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 6 comments.See all comments
Jason   Posted: April 26, 2008 9:43 PM
How interesting that none of the comments so far actually address or discuss the music of Son Lux, which is the point of this particular article. Surely, there are better places to discuss the merits (or lack thereof) of Lectio Divina. I've only heard snippets of Son Lux's music so far, but I find in very intriguing. I hear elements of Sufjan Stevens, Radiohead, and some of the other artists on the Anticon roster, like Alias and Clouddead. I hope to pick up the CD soon, so I can check it out more thoroughly.

Amanda   Posted: April 25, 2008 12:43 PM
Lectio Divina is a method of study; it's not at all in opposition to study (I'm not sure why people are suggesting so). The mediation is just one segment of the whole, and it is meditation on scripture, which is biblical. The point of Lectio Divina is to read scripture, contemplate what God is saying to us through scripture, consider how we can apply God's Word to our lives, and finally to pray scripture. It is a useful study discipline which takes a well-rounded approach to make sure that one is not studying just to acquire knowledge about God, but to have an intimate encounter with the living God in his Word and to be transformed by Him. Sounds pretty evangelical to me ;) Also, I really enjoyed this article and can't wait to hear this CD.

Anonymous Posted: April 25, 2008 11:06 AM
John, I appreciate your comments. I agree with you that the Matt. verse cited below was taken out of context. This has to do with praying pridefully for others to see. It doesn't speak to repitition at all regarding meditation to put ourselves in a trance. Thank you for pointing that out. Also, yes, we are commanded to meditate on Scripture, such as said in Psalm 1. But, we must be careful with things such as the Lectio because they go way beyond what is commanded in Scriture. Their version of meditation is MUCH different than the meditation commanded in the Bible. For example, in his pastoral letter to Timothy, Paul says to STUDY to show himself approved and that he is able to accurately use the Word of God which is the bedrock of our ministry. Study is what we are called to do so it gets inside of us, just as Psalm 1 says. Study, study, study with our whole being is what we are called to do, not empty our mind. We worship God in spirit AND in truth. Again, thanks.

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